Blogs and Stories

Max  Blumenthal

Inaugural Freak Show

You’ll never believe how a Christian right congressman and two anti-abortion protestors have prepared the Capitol for the Obama’s inauguration.

On January 7, second-term Republican Rep. Paul Broun of Georgia and two friends prayed over a door. It was not just any door, but the entranceway beneath the Capitol that President-elect Barack Obama will pass through as he walks onto the inaugural stage to take the oath of office. “I hope and pray that as God stirs the heart of our new president that President Obama will listen and will heed God’s direction,” Broun proclaimed.

Standing beside Broun, Rev. Patrick Mahoney launched into a prayer originally delivered by Billy Graham at Richard Nixon’s inauguration in 1969. “For too long we have neglected thy word and ignored thy laws,” Mahoney preached. “…We have sowed to the wind and are now reaping a whirlwind of crime, division, and rebellion. And now with the wages of sin staring us in the face, we remember thy words.”

Click Below to View Video

While Mahoney prayed, Rev. Rob Schenck turned his palms to the sky and muttered, “Yes” and “Have mercy” over and over. Then, he dipped his fingers in a jar of oil and painted several crosses on the door’s brass framing “as they did the furnishings of the tabernacle in the temple to the use of God and his word,” he prayed.

An officer from the Capitol Police Department stood immediately on the other side of the door, keeping watch over the inaugural stage, a top security concern for both his department and the Secret Service. With his back turned to the door, the officer appeared unaware of the secret ceremony Broun, Mahoney, and Schenck were performing just feet away. Whether security officials gave authorization for the ceremony is unclear; neither the Capitol Police nor Secret Service returned my calls. Broun’s office also refused to respond to my requests for a comment about the anointing.

While the Capitol prayer partners appeared earnest in the prayers for the president elect’s success, they have each distinguished themselves from their Christian right comrades by leveling some of the most paranoid imprecations Obama has faced since he arrived in the Senate. On November 10, 2008, a week after Obama’s election victory, Broun took umbrage at the President-elect’s call for a national civilian security force, a proposal also backed by George W. Bush. According to Broun, who acknowledged the possibility that he might be “crazy,” Obama had revealed himself as a radical Marxist Nazi socialist comparable to Adolf Hitler and Joseph Stalin.

"It may sound a bit crazy and off base,” Broun told an AP reporter, “but the thing is, he’s the one who proposed this national security force. I’m just trying to bring attention to the fact that we may—may not, I hope not—but we may have a problem with that type of philosophy of radical socialism or Marxism. That’s exactly what Hitler did in Nazi Germany and it’s exactly what the Soviet Union did. When he’s proposing to have a national security force that’s answering to him, that is as strong as the U.S. military, he’s showing me signs of being Marxist.”

After seeming to back away from his comments when he was heavily criticized, Broun announced that he was “not taking back anything [he] said.” “I firmly believe that we must not fall victim to the ‘it can't happen here’ mentality,” he declared in a press release. “I adhere to the adage ‘eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.’”

The son of a Democratic state senator from the liberal college town of Athens, Georgia, Broun attributes his conservative transformation to the wonder working power of Jesus. Broun’s born-again moment arrived in 1986, during the height of the Reagan Revolution, while he toiled as a doctor in rural Georgia, struggling to keep afloat during the first year of his marriage. He had suffered through several “broken marriages and episodes of broken relationships and financial problems,” Broun recalled during a November 2007 speech on the House floor. While watching an NFL game, Broun became entranced by a “gentleman with this big type hair wig on” holding a “John 3:16” sign. “As I sat there in my office that fall trying to figure out life, I picked up the Bible and read John 3:16,” Broun said. He suddenly transformed into a true believer, a cadre of the Christian right.

(The wigged “gentleman” was Rollen Stewart, an evangelical fanatic and fixture at sports events who is currently serving three consecutive sentences in jail on kidnapping charges as well as several minor sentences for stink bomb attacks).

While Mahoney prayed, Rev. Rob Schenck turned his palms to the sky and muttered, “Yes” and “Have mercy” over and over. Then, he dipped his fingers in a jar of oil and painted several crosses on the door’s brass framing.

“Mr. Speaker,” Broun announced from the House floor in 2007, “if we take our dishes and try to wash ‘em in our clothes washers we’re going to have problems, and that’s what we’re doing in our society, Mr. Speaker. We’re trying to do things against God’s inerrant word… So I rise today to support the Bible as the basis of our nation.”

Though he campaigned for reelection in 2008 as “The #1 Congressman on Immigration,” Broun has introduced only one bill since arriving in Washington: a measure banning pornography in the military. “Our troops should not see their honor sullied so that the moguls behind magazines like Playboy and Penthouse can profit,” Broun proclaimed. His spokesman testified to his expertise as an “addictionologist” who is “familiar with the negative consequences associated with long-term exposure to pornography.” Despite such scientific and personal authority, Broun’s bill to protect the troops from pictures of unclad women has gone nowhere.

Through his popularity among the Christian right, Broun became acquainted with Schenck and Mahoney, two Pentecostal preachers notorious for their flamboyant prayers over various monuments on Capitol Hill. When Mahoney helped anoint the inaugural stage door, he had just completed a 19-day period of fasting and prayer in front of the White House for the incoming president.

Schenck is the more significant figure of the two. A confidant of the evangelical former Attorney General John Ashcroft—the two used to pray together each week inside the Union Station movie theater—Schenck oversees a small political ministry in a townhouse across from the Supreme Court where various congressional aides conduct prayer sessions and Bible study classes.

I spoke with Schenck inside the townhouse for an hour in 2003. Relaxed and contemplative, Schenck did not seem like the pulpit banging preachers typically found at revivals. Indeed, he was raised in a liberal, secular household by Reform Jewish parents, and only converted to Christianity when he was 17. But Schenck’s laid-back manner concealed a propensity for confrontational stunts that twice landed him in the custody of Secret Service agents.

In the early 1990s, Schenck was arrested a dozen times during protests outside women's health clinics and abortion doctors' homes, and was momentarily detained by Secret Service after shoving an aborted fetus in front of Bill Clinton outside the 1992 Democratic National Convention. Four years later, Schenck grew so upset by President Clinton's veto of a bill banning partial abortion that he managed to creep behind him during a Christmas Eve service at the National Cathedral and whisper in his ear, "God will hold you to account, Mr. President.” He was immediately removed from the chapel and interrogated by Secret Service agents.

A founding member of the hardline anti-abortion group Operation Rescue, Schenck and his allies have engaged in what they call “direct action” to stop abortion by any means necessary. "There's going to be people wounded,” Mahoney, a fellow Operation Rescue leader, declared at a 1993 rally. “It's about whose will shall rule on this planet, God's or man's.”

Schenck spent several months in 1992 picketing the Buffalo, New York, home of Dr. Barnett Slepian, an obscure area abortion doctor that he personally targeted for scorn. Six years later, while cooking dinner for his wife and four children, Slepian was shot to death through his kitchen window by James Kopp, a volunteer at Operation Rescue's Binghamton, N.Y., office. Though Schenck denied knowing Kopp, the two had been arrested together at several clinic blockades.

When Schenck placed flowers at the doorstep of Slepian's office, his infuriated wife returned them with a letter that read, “It's your ‘passive’ following that incited the violence that killed Bart [Slepian] and took away both my and my children's future.”

Schenck attained a new prominence during the George W. Bush era, forging friendly ties with culture warriors like House Majority Leader Tom DeLay, Sen. Rick Santorum, and Sen. Joseph Lieberman, who allowed Schenck to hang a Ten Commandments plaque in his office. He even became a golfing buddy of Sen. Orrin Hatch. But DeLay and Santorum are gone from the Congress, victims of their own excesses, while Lieberman and Hatch have become marginalized by the Democratic majority.

Sensing his influence on the wane, Schenck targeted Obama. In January 2007, Schenck described the newly sworn-in senator’s Christian faith as “woefully deficient.” In a March 2008 videoblog, he accused Obama of crypto-Muslim religious sympathies.

Mahoney appeared at Obama’s Capitol Hill office in June 2008 to present his aides with a poster depicting the senator as Uncle Sam, declaring, “I Want YOU To Pay For Abortions.” Mahoney plans to hold an anti-abortion vigil along Obama’s parade route this January 20. “Sadly, President-elect Obama is on the wrong side of history and human rights by embracing the most radical abortion policies of any President in American history,” Mahoney said in announcing the vigil.

Broun, meanwhile, has issued a warning to the incoming president. “I will be the first to oppose [Obama] if he chooses to actually pursue a radical, left-wing socialist agenda,” Broun said in a statement posted on his personal website. “My deep concern is that he has a vision that is fundamentally different from the system of limited federal government that our Founders established, and that he will attempt to destroy the free enterprise, free market economic system which has made us the wealthiest nation in the history of the world.”

While many Republican lawmakers strike a conciliatory tone towards Obama, continuing a longstanding tradition of bipartisan goodwill for new presidents, the crosses freshly painted on the inaugural stage walkway by Broun, Schenck, and Mahoney reflect an ominous glow.

Max Blumenthal is a senior writer for The Daily Beast and writing fellow at The Nation Institute, whose book, Republican Gomorrah (Basic/Nation Books), is forthcoming in Spring 2009. Contact him at maxblumenthal3000@yahoo.com.


View as Multiple Pages
Back to Top
January 14, 2009 | 2:52pm
Comments ()
DanOregon

I'm fairly certain Paul Broun is the craziest member in Congress. I understand he won his seat only because his opponent in a runoff said they should bomb the University of Georgia except for the football team. Hadn't heard the John 3:16 story. That is really, really, weird.

|
|
Reply
3:23 pm, Jan 14, 2009
southernyankee

This crap is enough already. Stop shoving your religion down people throat. You are no better than the muslim extremist. If you take a look around the world right now the problems countries seemed to be having are caused by religious nutjobs. The nutjobs haven't paid attention to the election when the democratics won. I go to church but I don't not want my priest telling me what to do. I have started staying at home and pray at home because am tired of these religious nutjobs taking advantage of people. They should be caring what is happening with people who can't find jobs, homes, everyday issues. Right now the bedroom scene is not what the american people are concern about. Give it a rest.

|
|
Reply
3:46 pm, Jan 14, 2009
jaclynde

Painting crosses on doorways? This totally reminds me of the Serpent and the Rainbow. Thank non-existant god the fundies are out of there.

|
|
Reply
3:58 pm, Jan 14, 2009
sonofloud

The craziest thing of all is that the vast majority of congress and our soon to be homophobic president would see nothing wrong with what these religious fanatics have done.

|
|
Reply
4:07 pm, Jan 14, 2009
magicman

@ sonofloud

There is a small feature IN OUR CONSTITUTION called Freedom of Religion. Perhaps you have heard of it?

Obama is now Homophobic? Who said Homophobic ever existed in the first place? Don't you mean instead that you are Heterophobic? Or is that simply too obvious for you? The OBVIOUS truth is that a small minority, no more than 2-4% is making the noise of 79% while declaring the rest of us Homophobic. This is BULLSHIT. The fact is, no one ever thinks about who you sleep with or even cares. And why exactly should anyone be OBSESSED with this ONE SINGLE VOYEURISM?

Who Cares? Go sleep with an Ocean, just don't bother me with your need to jam SH_T down my throat....like you're married or something.

|
|
Reply
4:52 pm, Jan 14, 2009
ella04

After reading several articles by Mr. Blumenthal attacking various Christian policy-makers or pastors, I've begun to wonder if it is his view that any but the completely non-religious are acceptable to serve in the public eye in America. Their religious practices should not exclude them from being involved in society - to suggest it (as I believe is often implied in Mr. Blumenthal's articles) is in itself religious discrimination.

And so what if he wants to pray for Obama? Lord knows that with the current state of America, those who do believe in God should be offering as many prayers for Obama as they can.

Of course I prefer not to be so public with my prayers, so you won't be seeing me anointing doorways, but if Braun wants to do that, no one's making you watch or listen.




|
|
Reply
5:01 pm, Jan 14, 2009
verysmo

I shall pray to my God for all of them.

|
|
Reply
5:04 pm, Jan 14, 2009
still-trying

Inaugural Freak Show? This guys is going to need an army of support reporters. That, or he is simply a liberal tool being used to whine to the tune of the all-encompassing comedy tour that will be the silly drunks celebrating the anointed one's move up in power. This story would be barely on the fringe, if the author would work a little harder to look at the odd little circus filling this nation with paper and other waste in streets everywhere, come Jan 19.

|
|
Reply
5:59 pm, Jan 14, 2009
sonofloud

There is also something called separation of church and state but it doesn't surprise me you've never heard of it, it doesn't exist in our government except on an old piece of paper.

|
|
Reply
6:27 pm, Jan 14, 2009
sonofloud

Your faith based inititive tax dollars at work. LOL

How's this for irony: Eric McFadden, a former aide to Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, was arrested Wednesday. According to the Columbus Dispatch, he's charged with "seven prostitution-related counts" including "promoting prostitution, pandering obscenities involving a minor and compelling prostitution."

Where's the irony in that, you ask? Until fall 2007, McFadden worked for Strickland as director of the state's Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives.

Columbus police are calling him the "guru" of prostitution in the city, saying he's been involved in it for six years. According to the Dispatch, he was allegedly part of a ring operated on the Web that ran a raffle for sex and led to the creation of a brothel. Police also say he posted positive reviews of a 17-year-old prostitute.

http://www.salon.com/politics/war_room/2009/01/14/strickland_aide/index. html

|
|
Reply
6:34 pm, Jan 14, 2009
beastie13

How is it security guards did not notice the blessing and praying shenanigans? Would they have turned a blind eye to Wiccans casting a spell? I hope the guards are fired before Obama walks thru those doors. We need security for our president and not a bunch of Christian extremists doing what they think is God's work because they really know not what they do.

|
|
Reply
6:35 pm, Jan 14, 2009
glinda

Well then. I would suggest a representative from the American Native community to "smudge" that area pronto. At least the smell would be better.

|
|
Reply
6:52 pm, Jan 14, 2009
Banjo1

Is Blumenthal assigned full time to the trash-the-Christians beat for the DB? This is a man with a mission and an agenda which I think dovetails pretty closely with the ACLU, atheist and gay agenda. C'mon, Max. 'Fess up and come on out of the closet to us.

|
|
Reply
7:09 pm, Jan 14, 2009
Banjo1

There appears to be censorship in place here. How odd. How expected.

|
|
Reply
7:20 pm, Jan 14, 2009
venezia

I blame this on Reagan, for shutting down the asylums. Where are these poor mental cases supposed to go?

|
|
Reply
7:36 pm, Jan 14, 2009
kaykayscorner

Crosses with an ominous glow? What a silly piece this is. I know you won't believe it, but all Christians are not idiots. That guy sounds pretty dumb, but it's still a bad idea to sneer at Christ and his followers. A lot of us are praying for Obama even tho we didn't vote for him. Oh never mind. I think I'm talking to myself.

|
|
Reply
7:38 pm, Jan 14, 2009
jayhawk67

Has anybody ever suggested a sanity test as prerequisite for those seeking high office? We already know that a hypocrisy standard is a non-starter.

|
|
Reply
7:57 pm, Jan 14, 2009

This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.

|
|
Reply
8:06 pm, Jan 14, 2009
propitiousmoment

Do these people who believe in an omnipotent god not think their deity is powerful enough to stop political trends that he or she is not pleased with? And if they believe in free will, why do they try to force their religious convictions on everyone else?

|
|
Reply
8:19 pm, Jan 14, 2009

This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.

|
|
Reply
9:05 pm, Jan 14, 2009
propitiousmoment

Isn't Paul Broun the congressman that Bill Mahar sort of took apart in an interview in Religulous?

|
|
Reply
10:05 pm, Jan 14, 2009
twlala

Strange.

|
|
Reply
10:23 pm, Jan 14, 2009
fiduciaryatlarge

Schenk came to my wife's catholic church in 2004 to tell people to vote for GWB, however he would only say be a good steward of your vote and vote for the guy that is against abortion. So I cornered him afterward and asked him about the Iraqis that were being killed by GWB. He denied not caring about people after they are born and I pointed out his inconsistencies,at which time he started to become louder. Since he was representing the catholic church that day (the regular priest must have been scared to talk politics) I mentioned that the church was condemning people to death by preaching against condom use in Africa. His response was to get in my face and say "show me one study that says condoms prevent Aids." The crowd that had gather round let out a groan.

Needless to say I am persona non grata at the church.

|
|
Reply
10:45 pm, Jan 14, 2009
awhit7

Where was the anointing oil and prayers during the heinous eight years of the Bush administration? Where was the prayers by my people during the lies to war, torture, outing of a CIA agent, and other atrocities too numerous to mention? After all this nation has been through, now they are worried about President-elect Obama? They truly have a zeal but not of God.

|
|
Reply
11:21 pm, Jan 14, 2009
akindependent

I'm feeling better about being an Alaskan.

|
|
Reply
11:24 pm, Jan 14, 2009
Leave a Comment
Leave a comment

Thank you.
As a first time user, your comment has been submitted for review. It can take anywhere from a few hours to a day or two for your comment to be reviewed, depending on the time of week and the volume of comments we receive.

View Comments
Leave a comment

Please log in to leave comments.

Inaugural Freak Show

by Max Blumenthal

Info
RSS
Max  Blumenthal
Emails
|
print
Multiple Pages
|
text
-
+
Facebook
 | 
Twitter
 | 
Digg
 |